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Dashnak Genocide Bill Stalls In Armenian Parliament

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  • Dashnak Genocide Bill Stalls In Armenian Parliament

    DASHNAK GENOCIDE BILL STALLS IN ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT
    Irina Hovannisian

    Armenialiberty.org
    Nov 13 2009

    Armenia -- David Harutiunian, chairman of the parliament committee
    on legal affairs.

    A key committee of the National Assembly effectively rejected on
    Friday a proposal by the opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    (Dashnaktsutyun) to criminalize public statements denying that the
    1915 massacres of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey constituted genocide.

    Armenia's Criminal Code already carries heavy fines and up to four
    years' imprisonment for public denial of genocides and "other crimes
    against humanity." An amendment tabled by Dashnaktsutyun last month
    would extend the maximum punishment to five years and apply it to
    anyone "denying, playing down, approving or justifying the genocide
    of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey and Western Armenia."

    Dashnaktsutyun leaders acknowledge that the bill is directly connected
    with the recent agreements to normalize Armenia's relations with
    Turkey that have been strongly condemned by the nationalist party.

    They say it is specifically directed against a Turkish-Armenian
    "subcommission" of historians envisaged by one of the agreements.

    It would be tasked with studying the extermination of the Ottoman
    Empire's sizable Armenian population. Dashnaktsutyun and other
    critics of the deal say the very existence of such a body would
    call into question the fact of the genocide, a claim denied by the
    Yerevan government.

    In a written opinion submitted to the Armenian parliament committee
    on legal affairs this week, the Ministry of Justice objected to the
    Dashnaktsutyun bill and essentially upheld the existing Criminal Code
    clause relating to genocide denial. The committee on Friday postponed
    the bill's consideration by at least two months, meaning that the
    proposed amendment will not reach the parliament floor before February.

    The committee chairman, David Harutiunian, made no secret of his strong
    opposition to the measure, saying that it would create "extremely
    serious problems" in the ongoing Turkish-Armenian negotiations. He
    said its passage would lead the Turkish authorities to resume heavy
    enforcement of a controversial law makes it a crime to "insult the
    Turkish nation." The law, watered down last year, has been used in
    the prosecution of prominent Turks who have questioned the official
    Turkish version of the events of 1915.

    Harutiunian also argued that by adopting the amendment drafted by
    Dashnaktsutyun the National Assembly would give the impression that
    there is now a "serious movement" within Armenian that denies the
    genocidal character of those events. "Besides, I believe Armenia's
    position on this issue is so strong that we don't need any additional
    tools of defense in the shape of criminal liability," the former
    justice minister said at a committee meeting. "The stronger party
    doesn't need such tools."

    "I don't see that confidence about our strength," Vahan Hovannisian,
    the leader of the Dashnaktsutyun faction in the parliament, countered,
    referring to President Serzh Sarkisian's conciliatory policy towards
    Turkey. He said the October 10 signing of the Turkish-Armenian
    protocols in Zurich was "a sign of weakness" on the part of Yerevan.
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